Ufology Research

Friday, September 25, 2015

Seven Maxims of UFOs

Millman’s "Seven Maxims of UFOs"

In 1975, Dr. Peter Millman of the Herzberg
Institute of Astrophysics wrote and published a paper which was essentially a
policy statement for the National Research Council of Canada (NRC) regarding
UFOs. At that time the NRC was the repository and clearinghouse for all UFO
sightings reported by civilians and police across Canada. The NRC had even
requested and received cooperation from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police
throughout the country in the official investigation and reporting of UFOs.
This was for the purpose of actual scientific research in meteoritics, with the
idea being that many UFOs are meteors and an efficient and rapid series of
field investigations could lead to the recovery of meteorites shortly after
they were observed to fall. This worked successfully only once, when the
Innisfree meteorite was watched, tracked and recovered in Alberta.

Millman, one of
the most active Herzberg astrophysicists and with an interest in meteoritics,
was the scientist who handled most of the UFO reports coming from the public or
the RCMP. In fact, many handwritten sets of correspondence between him and
witnesses and investigators can be found in the NRC archives available at the
National Library of Canada.

Among his many
publications as an astronomer is "The Seven Maxims of UFOs - A Scientific
Approach," published in the Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada,
V.69, No. 4, pp. 175-188. Originally the text of a speech given to the Canadian
Association of Physical Transportation Management on March 12, 1975 in Toronto,
the article lays out what was the policy and approach of Millman, and therefore
the NRC, to UFO sightings. Millman was a frequent guest lecturer on UFOs to
many diverse groups, both professional and non-professional, and he leapt at
many opportunities to try to dispel the myth of UFOs as he considered the
phenomenon. He was, in effect, a combination of both Carl Sagan and Hector
Quintanella, with a predisposition that there were no such things as UFOs.

Millman’s Seven
Maxims were embraced wholeheartedly within the Canadian scientific community.
Decades later, astronomers still cite them when dismissing UFOs. Briefly, they
are:

1.“There is no thing new under
the Sun.”

Millman recognized that the UFO phenomenon dates back to Biblical
times, and “mysterious events in the sky have not materially changed their
pattern since man first started keeping records.” To him, this was important
since throughout history, “There has never been a fully proven case of physical
contact with an alien spacecraft...” Therefore, UFOs are not especially
significant phenomena.

2.“Seeing is not believing.”

Basically, “We see what we need to see, what we expect to see, what we are
trying to see, what we are conditioned to see.” In other words, witnesses see
UFOs because they want to see aliens, and they are fooled by sensory processes.

3.“Instruments can deceive.”

Millman noted that “all instruments are subject to their own particular forms
of ghosts and defects in the record.” In effect, radar and photographic
evidence of UFOs can be discarded.

4.“Beware the printed word.” Because “people take on faith what they see published in a journal or book...,”
published sources of UFO reports are untrustworthy. Further, because
fact-checking at newspapers is unsatisfactory, “a statistical study of a vast
collection of newspaper clippings is a pure waste of time.” (Jan Aldrich and Ed
Stewart take note.)

5.“Records are never complete.”

This maxim neatly does away with the unknowns left after studies of UFO data,
including those of both Project Blue Book and UFOROM. According to Millman,
when an investigator cannot explain a UFO case after intensive work to do so,
it is because according to statistical probability, “there are almost certain
to be cases where the clue is lost and never does turn up...” Further, “the
great majority of unexplained UFO cases are so lacking in firm factual data
that a good scientific study is very difficult, if not impossible.” So, even
given that, for example, 5% of UFO cases in a data sample were unexplained,
Millman simply said, “So what?”

6.“Man makes mysterious
machines.”

Millman recognized that many UFOs were likely “little-known or
little-understood effects of man-made equipment,” including secret test flights
of classified projects.

These Seven
Maxims were Millman’s recommended guide for scientists in dealing with the UFO
phenomenon. UFOs were simply not worth bothering with; they were either hoaxes,
hallucinations or illusions.

Ironically,
Millman cited only three books on UFOs for serious students of the phenomenon.
These were Klass’s UFOs Explained, Catoe’s bibliography and Hynek’s UFO
Experience. He described Hynek as “as astronomer who has probably had the
greatest direct contact with this subject of any of us.” One can only wonder if
he had actually read Hynek’s book, since it violated most of the Maxims.

In a later book,
The Hynek UFO Report, Hynek described how many skeptics within Blue Book and
the Condon Committee went to great lengths to explain UFO sightings by
stretching possible causes to outlandish lengths, just for the sake of
eliminating cases from the “unexplained” category. Millman easily fit this
mold. In many cases, he absolutely refused to call a report unexplained. For
example, in a classic, early CE3 in 1974 near McGregor, Manitoba, Canada, two
witnesses watched a landed saucer shaped object at close range and even walked
around it for a complete view, but Millman explained it as a mirage from a town
75 miles away. And, when circular “landing traces” were discovered fields in
Saskatchewan and Manitoba in 1974 and 1978 (long before Colin Andrews and
others had examined the “first” crop circles), Millman publicly gave his
opinion that they were caused by fairy ring mushrooms, a completely ridiculous
explanation for 16-foot-diameter impressions in wheat.

So, although
Millman’s Seven Maxims of UFOs were ontologically sound, putting them into
practice is difficult for both skeptics and believers who have already made up
their minds. Unfortunately, Millman himself fell into one of these categories.

Saturday, September 05, 2015

Physical Trace Cases in Canada

Above: One of 12 crop circles found near Rossburn, Manitoba, in 1979. The ring looks dark not because of burning, but because the damp conditions caused the swirled and crushed wheat to begin rotting in the field. Of course, these rings predated the British "beginning" of the crop circle phenomenon by many months.I'm not entirely sure what use it might be or who might have interest in this, but I had been going through my files and found my investigations and research on crop circles from the 80s and 90s. I gathered up all the case files and clippings and other citations and came up with a list of more than 100 (I actually didn't count them) separate physical trace cases that have been reported in Canada.Because crop circles are simply a special case of physical traces (and I note that as with many physical trace cases, no associated UFO is necessary for such a record), they were included in the list. Although I investigated many of the cases in the list myself, others came from a plethora of other sources, some of which are no longer accessible or able to be confirmed.While I think I have a pretty thorough list, I can imagine that some cases were missed for one reason or another. It will be updated if required.Another thing: it should be obvious to even the casual ufology fan that physical trace cases are almost absent now from UFO literature. It's ironic perhaps that hard physical evidence of UFOs is no longer found despite modern advances in technology that might be used for analyses of such discoveries.Or perhaps, the aliens are being a bit more careful not to leave behind evidence of their passing.